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Busting Loose : Ex-Ram Running Back Delpino Has Found Plenty of Room to Roam with the Broncos

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

It’s a fear of close quarters, one that squeezes Denver tailback Robert Delpino through the smallest of gaps in the line and breaks him free in the tightest of situations.

Such is life inside the 10-yard line.

“When we get inside there my eyes get big and my heart starts pumping,” he said. “It’s more of a claustrophobic thing . . . where you want to get out of there, and the end zone is your only release.”

And that was just how Delpino felt last spring, when he left the Rams as an unrestricted free agent. He was looking for a release--and he found one in Denver, where the Broncos were swift in signing him.

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Saying he felt unappreciated, Delpino left town with bitter feelings about the last of his five seasons with the Rams.

He thought the Rams used the contract holdout in training camp against him,

denying him a chance to regain the starting tailback role he earned the previous year. He was the team’s MVP in 1991, leading the Rams in rushing with 688 yards as well as catching 55 passes.

But he went from spectacular to spectator in 1992, starting only four games and playing in only 10 because of his fading role in the offense and a sprained left knee five games into the season.

“It still bugs me to this day that a four-day contract holdout cost me a starting job,” Delpino said. “They pretty much held that against me all season. I felt unappreciated after the kind of year that I had in 1991.

“Nobody got a chance to see what I could do because they (Rams) wouldn’t play me. I was doing fine in practice, but I never got into a game.”

Eight months later, Delpino is getting every opportunity he could ask for--and a trip to the playoffs for the first time in four seasons.

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After starting at fullback most of the season, Delpino will start his second consecutive game at tailback Sunday when the Broncos play the Raiders in a wild-card game at the Coliseum.

He replaces the injured Rod Bernstine (shoulder separation), also acquired by the Broncos in the off-season.

“It’s great to be back in the playoffs,” said Delpino, who hasn’t participated in a postseason game since the Rams reached the NFC championship game in 1989.

“This offense reminds me of the old days with the Rams, the 1988 and ’89 teams. Nobody could stop us then.”

Delpino was a rookie, a fifth-round pick from Missouri, when the Ram offense was tearing up the league in 1988. He started only four games his first two seasons, when the Rams were a combined 21-11 and played in four playoff games.

The Rams used him mainly as a utility player in his first three seasons. He played wide receiver at Dodge City (Kan.) Community College, and his sure hands made him a logical target on routes out of the backfield.

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Delpino’s only season as the Ram starter came in 1991. He scored 10 touchdowns, nine by rushing, and was the only bright spot in a 3-13 season in which the Rams lost 10 consecutive games.

He got off to a quick start (264 yards rushing in three games) but slowed toward the end, giving the Rams reason to believe he couldn’t physically handle 200 carries a season.

“They said I couldn’t run, and I proved them wrong,” Delpino said. “Then they said I couldn’t catch, and I proved them wrong. Then they said I couldn’t run and catch, and I proved them wrong again.

“It’s always been that way with me. The critics think they know everything about me, but they don’t know anything.”

Delpino had flourished in 1991 under Coach John Robinson, but didn’t get off to a good start with Chuck Knox, who replaced Robinson after the season.

Knox’s second run as Ram coach started without Delpino, who was holding out in hopes of renegotiating a $325,000 a year salary that was well below what most starters are paid.

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The Rams wouldn’t budge, but Delpino did. He returned a few days into camp, only to find Cleveland Gary establishing himself as the starter.

Gary rushed for 1,125 yards in 16 starts. Delpino had 116 yards in 32 carries and 139 yards in 18 receptions.

The lack of playing time, coupled with the midseason knee injury, left Delpino frustrated, but not complaining, by season’s end.

“Not once did I say anything to the coaches,” he said. “I figured that if there was a problem, they would come to me. I didn’t want to be the one to complain.”

But Delpino felt he had no future in the Rams’ crowded backfield. Gary was the starter at tailback, and there were whispers the Rams were taking a running back in the upcoming draft. That pick would turn out to be Jerome Bettis, who finished second in the league in rushing as a rookie this season.

David Lang converted from tailback to fullback and emerged late in the season as the Rams’ catch-and-run back. Rookie fullback Tim Lester was the team’s top blocking back.

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So where did that leave Delpino? As an unrestricted free agent.

Delpino knew that if the Rams didn’t need a pass-catching back, several other teams around the league did.

“I met with Coach Knox after the season,” Delpino said, “and my role was never defined. He said I had a spot on the team, and that was all. I didn’t want to be in the same situation I was last year, so I looked around. I felt they really made no effort to sign me.”

But Phoenix, Atlanta, Kansas City and Denver did.

Delpino grew up in Dodge City, Kan., and followed the Chiefs and Broncos. So it was no coincidence that he narrowed his choices to those teams.

“Kansas City and Denver showed the most interest in me,” Delpino said. “Kansas City was closer to where I grew up, but I came to Denver twice before signing and I was really impressed. Coach (Wade Phillips) showed so much interest, I knew this was where I wanted to play.”

Denver also was wooing Bernstine, and Delpino figured the Broncos would sign one of the two backs, but not both. He was wrong. Not only did the Broncos sign them, they started them.

Delpino fit perfectly into the Denver offense, which desperately needed a short-yardage back. Quarterback John Elway negotiated drives inside the five, and Delpino closed the deal. His eight touchdowns, all by rushing, are tied with several other players for fourth in the AFC.

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His receiving skills give Elway an extra target out of the backfield. Delpino has gained 445 yards in 131 carries, and has caught 26 passes for 195 yards--not stunning numbers, but a role player’s numbers. And Delpino doesn’t mind playing that role, especially when his team is winning.

Denver (9-7) is the first winning team Delpino has played on since 1989. Sure beats suffering through a 5-11 season with the Rams, right?

“There were a couple of years where we struggled and there were a couple of years where we had some success,” Delpino said of the Rams. “I just felt that after last year, it was time for a change. And everything worked out for the better.”

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